Did you know Pegasus Spyware Caught Attempting Hacks Against Journalists
Amnesty International just shared a new report that detailed more about possible hacks against two leading journalists from Serbia. This was done through the spyware Pegasus that belongs to the NSO Group.
The
two journalists were members of the BIRN, which is Siberia’s
Balkan-based investigative group. They got suspicious texts including
links. Those who fell victim to the phishing attack would click on the
link, assuming it was a safe environment, but researchers were shocked
to see the result.
The links were related to a domain that
belonged to the NSO Group’s system that could target activists and
journalists. The tech research allows Amnesty to highlight any malicious
site that delivers Pegasus spyware, including a domain used for the
campaign.
So many NSO group and their clients continue to lose out on battles to stay hidden or disguised. The leading problem here is how they’re not as deceiving as they believe they could be. There is plenty of evidence that proves how the claims about getting caught are true.
We saw how the Citizen Lab in 2016 rolled out the first tech report documenting attacks rolled out through Pegasus. This happened to target an individual from the UAE. After that, in less than a decade, we saw researchers highlight 130 people from different places around the globe hitting and hacking the company’s spyware as per a running tally by security expert Runa Sandvik.
The number of targeted victims is better shown through the Pegasus Project. It’s a collective journalistic means to investigate abusive NSO spyware that was dependent on leaked lists of nearly 50,000 phone numbers. They entered the NSO Group’s target system.
With time, there were more than a dozen people, but now there are more protections up for grabs that keep people safe and aware of such attacks. Other than Amnesty and Citizen Lab, another nonprofit by the name Access Now is assisting with the process of user safety and security.
But
it’s not only nonprofits that are calling out the Pegasus Spyware
group. We similarly saw Apple catching them in action by rolling out
alerts to victims of this spyware located all over the globe. This
prompted users to seek help through Access Now.
More tech
reports continue to document spyware attacks rolled out through Pegasus
as well as those generated by other firms. Maybe the NSO Group’s issues
lie in the fact that it makes sales to other nations using it
thoroughly, such as reporters and civil society members.
The
biggest OPSEC mistake here appears to be how the NSO Group continues to
sell to those nations targeting media personnel but end up exposing
themselves along the way.